Amma's Pearls of Wisdom
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Amma travels the world, alternating long hours of darshan with the maternal hug she gives to all who come to her, and her teachings. Here are some of her most beautiful pearls of wisdom, one for each day of the year, set out in the form of a perpetual calendar. Amma's life is her only message: give everything and give of oneself. Her religion is love.
Mata Amritanandamayi
Born in India in 1953, Amma is a spiritual figure of international stature. Since 1975, she has hugged more than 34 million people, one by one, tirelessly, across 40 countries on all 5 continents. Through her international network of charitable initiatives, Embracing the World, she helps those most in need. She has received the Gandhi-King Award for peace and non-violence in 2002 at the United Nations Organisation in Geneva.
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Amma's Pearls of Wisdom - Mata Amritanandamayi
Mata Amritanandamayi
AMMA’S PEARLS
OF WISDOM
Publication compiled by
VALERIE SERVANT
Translated from Malayalam by
Embracing the World
Where love is present, there is no effort
The happiness of others is my respite
Amma
CONTENTS
Amma: Love in action Anne Ducrocq
Note: The Notion of God Brahmacharini Dipamrita (Claudine Tourdes),
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
Acknowledgements
About the Book
Copyright
AMMA: LOVE IN ACTION
‘My religion is love’
Amma
Mata Amritanandamayi is regarded as one of the great spiritual figures of our time. More universally known as Amma – ‘mother’ in Malayalam, the official language spoken in Kerala – she declares that her religion is love. In India, she is considered to be a ‘Mahatma’, or a Great Soul.
Amma is the incarnation of love, truth, renunciation and self-sacrifice in the very noblest sense. She does not stop at teaching; she puts her teachings into practice every second, every day of her life. Established in plenitude, she gives everything. This is why we feel the divine in her presence.
Even though she never married, nor had children, she has become the mother of all. Considered by thousands as the Mother of Compassion, she is both a great master and a universal mother.
To those who tend to hide away from others, or cut themselves off from their immediate surroundings, Amma shows the way of giving and opening the heart. She teaches the path of unity and infinite compassion.
Her famous darshan, the embrace that bestows, in her own words, ‘an uninterrupted flow of love’, is a simple yet powerful gesture. This gesture of unconditional love has become the symbol of her international reach. Since 1975, she has taken into her maternal arms, one by one, more than thirty-four million people across the globe, touching the hearts of all who come to her.
However, it doesn’t end with the darshan, because Amma is ‘compassion in action’; through her organization Embracing the World, she comes to the aid of the world’s poorest and most destitute.
Amma’s life is her only message: Give everything, give of yourself.
A SHORT BIOGRAPHY
Amma was born on 27 July 1953 into a family of humble fishermen on the Kerala coast, southern India. She was one of thirteen children. As early as five, Amma showed extraordinary mystical qualities. She was consumed with love for the divine, and she already wrote and sang devotional songs.
Amma was only nine years old when her mother fell ill. The whole responsibility for the household fell on her shoulders. She was obliged to leave school, but she offered her long hours of work to the Lord.
At the age of thirteen, she experienced her first rapture. After rigorous and austere spiritual practices, she increasingly went into samadhi (a deep meditative state), and stayed like this for hours on end, sometimes even for days, without showing any signs of consciousness.
At the same period, the girl felt a profound call to serve the poor, to whom she gave much care and attention. She stole butter and milk from her parents and gave them to those in need. She tried to comfort people both materially and physically by holding them in her arms. A spontaneous attitude which may seem natural, but which, at the time, was considered to bring shame on her family: young Indian women were not allowed to touch other people, let alone men, not to mention people belonging to a different caste.
As a teenager, her trances became more frequent. Members of her own family and villagers simply could not fathom her; she did not behave like a ‘normal’ young woman. But no one could stop her from her mission.
By the age of twenty, this young woman’s aura was already considerable: people came from further and further away to meet her, and a community of disciples grew. Gradually, she came to be honoured for the extraordinary qualities that emanated from her. For those close to her, she is the feminine incarnation of the divine.
In 1975, at the age of twenty-two, she left the family home and was forced to live outside. The fact that the sky was her only roof, the earth her bed, the moon her lamplight, and the sea breeze her fan has become a legend. The birds and the other animals kept her company and became her faithful companions. They brought her food and served it to her.
It was at this time that Amma asserted her true mission: to relieve the world’s suffering and guide the steps of spiritual seekers. Ever since, inexhaustibly, in forty countries, on all five continents, she has continued embracing and serving. Her darshan inspires many people to volunteer and to serve those who suffer in life.
In 1981, her ashram was built at her birthplace. In 1987, at the age of thirty-four, she made her first world tour. Today, her time is divided between her main ashram in India and the tours she makes every year to the United States, Europe, Japan and other parts of India, where she meets disciples, followers and the simply curious who come to experience her darshan. Everywhere in the world, communities have been founded around her message: ‘To give love and compassion to the poor and suffering is our duty towards God.’
HUMANITARIAN ACTION
Amma is not only about darshan. She was presented with the Gandhi-King Award for peace and non-violence for her internationally renowned charitable work.
Thanks to donations gathered from across the globe, Embracing the World’s scope of action equals that of a state. This NGO is an international network of charitable works supporting women, children, orphans, the poor, and victims of natural disasters.
A tsunami in Indonesia, India or Sri Lanka, the nuclear accident in Fukushima, an earthquake in Nepal? Amma’s volunteers rally immediately to help, in love and selfless service. Embracing the World has given more than fifty-one million euros in emergency aid since 1998.
The NGO has developed multiple actions including food distribution (ten million meals served to the homeless and starving in India; every year, 75,000 people receive support in the United States in forty-one towns), free housing (45,000 houses built for the homeless in India), pensions for widows, orphanages, education, vocational training, and health care (free health care delivered to three million patients, hospitals, etc.). It has also developed five university campuses, which have already become references in the field of computing and research over just a few years.
These are just some of the actions so far accomplished. As for the future as many projects are already in the pipeline.
Anne Ducrocq
June 2015
‘In today’s world, there are two types of poverty: the first is due to a lack of food, clothing or housing, and the second is due to a lack of love and compassion. We must first deal with the second type of poverty because if our hearts are full of love and compassion, we will give our heartfelt service to all those who have no food, no clothes and no shelter.’
Amma
NOTE: THE NOTION OF GOD
The word God is used for convenience. In the tradition into which Amma was born, this world is the manifestation in infinite forms of a singular ‘energy’ of love and light. This is the One God, the Divinity, the Divine Mother. It points to that unfathomable mystery of supreme Consciousness, the Absolute, the All, Emptiness, unconditional Love, Peace that surpasses all understanding, abiding Joy, etc.
This energy of love and light is our true nature. The Self. The divine within.
It is the mind that prevents access to it, hiding our true nature with its conditioning, beliefs, fears and desires.
Brahmacharini Dipamrita (Claudine Tourdes),
Amma’s representative in France
JANUARY
JANUARY 1 – Living with joy
Not just one day, but all three hundred and sixty five days of the year should be filled with joy. Our entire lives should become a festival! Spirituality teaches us the way to accomplish this. For this surrender to take place, total refuge in the Supreme Being is required.
JANUARY 2 – The yoga of writing
It is a good habit to write a diary every day, preferably before going to bed. In your diary you can note down how much time you have devoted to your spiritual practice each day. Write the diary in such a way that it helps you see your mistakes. Then, make the effort not to repeat them. Your diary should not merely be a document of other people’s faults or your daily transactions.
JANUARY 3 – Stop the pendulum of the mind
The mind can be compared to a pendulum. Like the incessant movement of a clock’s pendulum, the pendulum of the mind swings back and forth from happiness to sorrow. When the pendulum of the clock moves to one extreme, it is only gaining enough momentum to swing back to the other end. Likewise, when the pendulum of the mind moves towards happiness, it is only gaining the momentum to reach the other pole of sorrow. Real peace and happiness can be experienced only when the pendulum of the mind stops swinging altogether. From that stillness, real peace and bliss ensue. This state of perfect stillness is verily the essence of life.
JANUARY 4 – Reaching out
To consider someone unworthy of the spiritual path is like deciding, after building a hospital, that no patients are allowed. Even a broken watch will show the correct time twice a day! So, what is needed is acceptance. When we avoid someone as ‘unsuitable’, we are helping to engender vengefulness in that person, and he or she will again slip into error. On the other hand, if we praise what is good in such people and try patiently to correct their mistakes, we can uplift them.
JANUARY 5 – God is present in everything
God is present everywhere: in the singing cuckoo bird, the cawing crow, the roaring lion, and the thundering ocean. It is that same Power that sees through our eyes, hears through our ears, tastes through our tongue, smells through our nose, feels through our skin, and powers our legs as we walk. It is this Power that fills everything. It must be experienced.
JANUARY 6 – May we become insatiable seekers
Today, we search outwardly for the causes and solutions to all the problems of the world. In our haste, we forget the greatest truth of all, which is that the source of all problems is to be found in the human mind. We forget that the world can become good only if the mind of the individual becomes good. So, along with the understanding of the outer world, it is essential that we also get to know the inner world.
JANUARY 7 – A single right action is enough
If a person does a hundred good things and makes just one mistake, people will despise him and reject him. But if a person makes a hundred mistakes and does just one good thing, God will love him and accept him. Be therefore bound only to God, my children. Dedicate everything to Him.
JANUARY 8 – Strengthen our minds
Set aside some time each day for reading spiritual books. Have a book on your master’s teachings or a book like the Bhagavadgita, the Ramayana, the Bible, or the Koran available for daily reading. Memorize at least one verse a day. You should also read other spiritual books when you have time. Reading the biographies and teachings of the great masters will help strengthen your spirit of renunciation and help you easily understand the spiritual principles.
JANUARY 9 – Surrender
My children, we should surrender our minds to God. This is not easy because the mind is not an object we can just pick up and give away.